A New Hampshire closing cost calculator that estimates the one-time costs a buyer pays at settlement on a New Hampshire home purchase. It bakes in New Hampshire’s real-estate transfer tax — New Hampshire levies a real-estate transfer (or deed/conveyance) tax of about 1.5% of the purchase price — and adds the lender, title, appraisal and prepaid-escrow lines, then shows the grand total both as a dollar figure and as a percentage of the purchase price. Everything runs in your browser; nothing you type is uploaded.
How it works
The calculator builds your total from five real components:
transfer tax = price x 0.01500 (1.5% of the price)
loan amount = price x (1 - downPayment%)
origination = loan x 1.0% (typical lender fee)
title + settle = price x 0.5%
appraisal = flat fee (default $600)
prepaid escrow = ~3 months property tax + ~12 months homeowners insurance
The transfer-tax rate of 1.5% is the New Hampshire statewide figure baked into this tool. Origination is estimated at about 1% of the loan amount, title and settlement at about 0.5% of the price, and prepaid escrow seeds your tax and insurance account. The total is the sum of all five, and the percent-of-price figure tells you how heavy your closing costs are relative to the home value. Every field is editable, so you can paste numbers straight off a lender’s Loan Estimate.
Example
On a $400,000 New Hampshire home with 20% down (a $320,000 loan):
- Transfer tax: $6,000 (1.5% of price)
- Origination (~1% of loan): $3,200
- Title + settlement (~0.5% of price): $2,000
- Appraisal: $600
- Prepaid escrow (taxes + insurance): $2,500
That totals roughly $14,300, or about 3.6% of the purchase price. Change the price, down payment or any fee and every line and the total update instantly.
Notes
This is an estimate only and not financial, tax or legal advice. Actual closing costs depend on your lender, title company, county and contract terms, and who pays the transfer tax is negotiable. New Hampshire’s transfer-tax rules are administered by the New Hampshire Department of Revenue and the county recorder; your binding figures appear on the lender’s Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure. Verify all amounts with your settlement agent before closing.